6533b7d6fe1ef96bd12671f5
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Are coffee and toffee served in a cup? Ortho-phonologically mediated associative priming.
Jon Andoni DuñabeitiaManuel PereaManuel Carreirassubject
Response primingCommunicationAnalysis of VariancePhysiologybusiness.industryDecision MakingExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyGeneral MedicinePaired-Associate LearningSemanticsAssociative primingNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyPattern Recognition VisualPhoneticsPhysiology (medical)Lexical decision taskReaction TimeHumansPsychologybusinessPriming (psychology)Perceptual MaskingGeneral PsychologyOrthographyPhotic Stimulationdescription
We report three masked associative priming experiments with the lexical decision task that explore whether the initial activation flow of a visually presented word activates the semantic representations of that word's orthographic/phonological neighbours. The predictions of cascades and serial/modular models of lexical processing differ widely in this respect. Using a masked priming paradigm (stimulus onset asynchrony, SOA = 50 ms), words preceded by ortho-phonologically mediated associated “neighbours” ( oveja–MIEL, the Spanish for sheep–HONEY; note that oveja is a phonological neighbour of abeja, the Spanish for bee) were recognized more rapidly than words preceded by an unrelated word prime (Experiments 1 and 3). Furthermore, the magnitude of the ortho-phonologically mediated priming effect ( oveja–MIEL) was similar to the magnitude of the associative priming effect ( abeja– MIEL). With visible primes and a 250-ms SOA, only the directly associated words showed a priming effect (Experiment 2). These findings pose some problems for a modular account and are more easily interpreted in terms of cascaded models.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2008-12-01 | Quarterly journal of experimental psychology (2006) |